IMDb-BEWERTUNG
7,1/10
2580
IHRE BEWERTUNG
Füge eine Handlung in deiner Sprache hinzuCoco, Tsumuji, and Satoru, patients of a mental clinic who believe the world will end, escape from the clinic and search for a place to picnic so they can watch the end of the world.Coco, Tsumuji, and Satoru, patients of a mental clinic who believe the world will end, escape from the clinic and search for a place to picnic so they can watch the end of the world.Coco, Tsumuji, and Satoru, patients of a mental clinic who believe the world will end, escape from the clinic and search for a place to picnic so they can watch the end of the world.
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- 3 wins total
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Since the composition is so delicate, the harsh texture of the editing should be made deliberately.
The gloomy and horrific interior space and imaginative outdoor wanderings seem to tear the movie into two parts, but when the fences, rainstorms, feathers and other details are fully expressed, the metaphorical irony is gradually replaced by a purely romantic atmosphere.
Although some part of the film it's going too far, the integral effect is quite remarkable.
To watch this film about three patients from a fairly grim looking mental institution you have to suspend one belief: The belief is that all three can just leave without being detected. Once you get beyond that, and you should, you are left with a film that is oddly both ugly and beautiful. The three patients are Coco (the wonderful Chara), Tsumuji (the equally great Tadanobu Asano) and Satoru (Koichi Hashizume). They are sent to the institution for reasons you find out about eventually, and once they leave the film really expands into a somewhat atmospheric but beautifully shot film, with you watching these three supposedly crazy people interact with themselves and, in my favorite scene, a priest. The film is not long, only 65 minutes or so, but I was deeply affected about what these three young people are all about. So, get beyond my little caveat and watch the world with them. I think its a richly rewarding film about the frailty of life.
Picnic (1996) - Movie
Picnic, directed by Shunji Iwai, is a surreal and poetic Japanese film that explores themes of mental illness, existential searching, and human connection through a dreamlike lens. Set mostly within the walls of a bleak mental asylum and its desolate outskirts, the story follows three young patients-Coco, Tsumuji, and Satoru-who each carry emotional wounds and delusions that shape their reality.
Coco, a fragile girl with a troubled past, forms a strange bond with Tsumuji, who believes the end of the world is imminent. After discovering a Bible, Tsumuji becomes convinced the world will end on a date he misinterprets, and the trio begins preparing for doomsday. They break out of the asylum and embark on a whimsical, sometimes dark, journey across the city's rooftops, believing they must find the perfect spot to witness the apocalypse-a "picnic" with the end of everything.
Shot in a grainy, washed-out style that heightens its haunting beauty, Picnic blends fantasy and despair. The characters' distorted perceptions and naive attempts to understand the world offer a stark commentary on the alienation and confusion felt by the mentally ill, and perhaps by youth in general. The film shifts between eerie silence, philosophical musings, and bursts of childlike joy, often blurring the line between imagination and reality.
As their journey nears its end, Coco comes to her own interpretation of freedom and existence, which leads to a quiet, ambiguous conclusion that invites reflection rather than resolution. The ending suggests both an escape and a transcendence, depending on the viewer's perspective.
Minimalist in plot but rich in emotional depth and atmosphere, Picnic is a contemplative work that uses its 68-minute runtime to leave a lasting impression. It remains one of Iwai's most enigmatic and visually poetic creations.
Review written by artist jayakumar jrain.
Picnic, directed by Shunji Iwai, is a surreal and poetic Japanese film that explores themes of mental illness, existential searching, and human connection through a dreamlike lens. Set mostly within the walls of a bleak mental asylum and its desolate outskirts, the story follows three young patients-Coco, Tsumuji, and Satoru-who each carry emotional wounds and delusions that shape their reality.
Coco, a fragile girl with a troubled past, forms a strange bond with Tsumuji, who believes the end of the world is imminent. After discovering a Bible, Tsumuji becomes convinced the world will end on a date he misinterprets, and the trio begins preparing for doomsday. They break out of the asylum and embark on a whimsical, sometimes dark, journey across the city's rooftops, believing they must find the perfect spot to witness the apocalypse-a "picnic" with the end of everything.
Shot in a grainy, washed-out style that heightens its haunting beauty, Picnic blends fantasy and despair. The characters' distorted perceptions and naive attempts to understand the world offer a stark commentary on the alienation and confusion felt by the mentally ill, and perhaps by youth in general. The film shifts between eerie silence, philosophical musings, and bursts of childlike joy, often blurring the line between imagination and reality.
As their journey nears its end, Coco comes to her own interpretation of freedom and existence, which leads to a quiet, ambiguous conclusion that invites reflection rather than resolution. The ending suggests both an escape and a transcendence, depending on the viewer's perspective.
Minimalist in plot but rich in emotional depth and atmosphere, Picnic is a contemplative work that uses its 68-minute runtime to leave a lasting impression. It remains one of Iwai's most enigmatic and visually poetic creations.
Review written by artist jayakumar jrain.
I am very impressed by shunji iwai's films just like everyone else seems to be. I loved swallowtail butterfly so much. This film was good too, but it seemed to lack the feeling of reality and the created world in swallowtail.
Chara is really awesome, and the other two guys do well at times, and lack at times in their acting skills. the loony people just don't always seem that looney, you can at times tell that they are just acting that way.
still the film is done beautifully, and the story is interesting enough. watching three crazy people take a walk on a wall to see the end of the world is certainly original, and surprises may come. so anyhow. i would say that you should watch this, but don`t miss swallowtail.
Chara is really awesome, and the other two guys do well at times, and lack at times in their acting skills. the loony people just don't always seem that looney, you can at times tell that they are just acting that way.
still the film is done beautifully, and the story is interesting enough. watching three crazy people take a walk on a wall to see the end of the world is certainly original, and surprises may come. so anyhow. i would say that you should watch this, but don`t miss swallowtail.
In Picnic, director Shunji Iwai has crafted a short film of visual beauty and lyric poetry. Three young inmates at a mental institution walk along a wall connecting the hospital to the outside world and simply keep going, perhaps a metaphor for the Jungian idea of the long journey back to the genuine self. As they travel on a ledge between the ground and the sky, each in their own way attempts to liberate themselves from their inauthenticity and recapture the experience of wholeness. The inmates are Coco, played by Chara, a Japanese pop singer who would later star in Iwai's Swallowtail Butterfly, Tsumuji, performed by Tadanobu Asano, now the husband of Chara, and Satoru (Koichi Hashizumi).
The first twenty minutes are set inside the institution. A reluctant Chara is delivered to the hospital by her parents and is subject to abuse and mistreatment by a female attendant. Tsumuji has murdered one of his teachers who was abusing him and sees the dead man's ghost before him in a very disturbing sequence. It is not clear why Satoru is there but we see scenes of him masturbating excessively. As the three find a common bond, they set out on their journey, first encountering a young choir at a Christian church singing an otherworldly hymn. They are befriended by the priest who gives them a bible even though Tsumuji says he is a non-believer.
When the boy reads the publication date, however, he concludes that will be the day the world will end and the three decide to have a picnic at the nearby lighthouse to wait for the fateful moment. As they prepare to witness the world's end, they open up to each other with a childlike innocence and acknowledge their wrongdoing. Elizabeth Lesser says, "The price for staying heart blind is a life unlived". The Dalai Lama has gone as far as saying that "the tendency to avoid problems and the emotional suffering inherent in them is the primary basis of all mental illness". As they talk to each other and begin to make connection, they become real people not "mental patients".
While the film's meaning may be different to each viewer, to me it is saying that we should live our life as if the world will end tomorrow, be in touch with the beauty of each moment, and acknowledge the actions in our life that may have harmed others. Whatever the message, Picnic is a stunning achievement, each scene capable of standing alone as a unique work of art. In spite of a sadness that reminded me of my own dark moods of adolescence, it left me with a feeling of transcendence.
The first twenty minutes are set inside the institution. A reluctant Chara is delivered to the hospital by her parents and is subject to abuse and mistreatment by a female attendant. Tsumuji has murdered one of his teachers who was abusing him and sees the dead man's ghost before him in a very disturbing sequence. It is not clear why Satoru is there but we see scenes of him masturbating excessively. As the three find a common bond, they set out on their journey, first encountering a young choir at a Christian church singing an otherworldly hymn. They are befriended by the priest who gives them a bible even though Tsumuji says he is a non-believer.
When the boy reads the publication date, however, he concludes that will be the day the world will end and the three decide to have a picnic at the nearby lighthouse to wait for the fateful moment. As they prepare to witness the world's end, they open up to each other with a childlike innocence and acknowledge their wrongdoing. Elizabeth Lesser says, "The price for staying heart blind is a life unlived". The Dalai Lama has gone as far as saying that "the tendency to avoid problems and the emotional suffering inherent in them is the primary basis of all mental illness". As they talk to each other and begin to make connection, they become real people not "mental patients".
While the film's meaning may be different to each viewer, to me it is saying that we should live our life as if the world will end tomorrow, be in touch with the beauty of each moment, and acknowledge the actions in our life that may have harmed others. Whatever the message, Picnic is a stunning achievement, each scene capable of standing alone as a unique work of art. In spite of a sadness that reminded me of my own dark moods of adolescence, it left me with a feeling of transcendence.
Wusstest du schon
- WissenswertesChara and Tadanobu Asano met while filming this film and married the same year. The two had an amicable divorce in 2009 after fourteen years of marriage.
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- How long is Picnic?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Laufzeit
- 1 Std. 12 Min.(72 min)
- Farbe
- Seitenverhältnis
- 1.66 : 1
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